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$
SEPTEMBER 22, 2023 | VOLUME 14 | ISSUE 20
YOUR PURCHASE BENEFITS THE VENDORS.
PLEASE BUY ONLY FROM BADGED VENDORS.
ARPA funds pilot guranteed income
in Ann Arbor. Page 7
AMANDA GALE
#573
ASK YOUR VENDOR:
IF YOU COULD
GO ANYWHERE,
WHERE WOULD
YOU GO?
GROUNDCOVER
NEWS AND SOLUTIONS FROM THE GROUND UP | WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICH.
Happy anniversary to four 'MISSION'
community houses — Jimmy Hill House,
Mercy House, Peace House and
Hospitality House. page 4
THIS PAPER WAS BOUGHT FROM
• Proposal: Housing-development
accelerator
• Charbonneau: Open your eyes to
housing inequity. PAGE 4
@groundcovernews, include vendor name and vendor #
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
GROUNDCOVER
Reid "Kit" Warling
May 21, 1995 - September 15, 2023
Reid Warling passed away on September 15, 2023 at the age of 28. Beloved
son of Neal and Suzanne Warling. Dear brother of May, Jackson, Michael and
Matthew. Loving nephew of aunt Denise and uncle David Ricketts, uncle
Kenneth Warling, aunt Vicki Derry and aunt Ann Bugnon. Cherished uncle
of Charles Feight. Caring cousin of Reese Ricketts. Reid is also survived by
friends Jessie Cane and Kevin Jones.
Reid, vendor No. 395, started selling Groundcover News in 2018 and sold
the paper on and off over the years.
Reid was a very talented poet and actor. If you were lucky enough to hear
him singing you would be truly blown away by his voice. He had a passion
for reading, spending some time being a part of a book club. Reid was known
for his kind heart, gentle personality, love for animals, and his intelligence.
Reid is loved deeply and will be missed fiercely.
SEPTEMBER 22, 2023
Reid and Jessie Cane (right).
CREATING OPPORTUNITY AND A
VOICE FOR LOW-INCOME PEOPLE WHILE TAKING
ACTION TO END HOMELESSNESS AND POVERTY.
Groundcover News, a 501(c)(3)
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increase in poverty. Our paper is a
proud member of the International
Network of Street Papers.
STAFF
Lindsay Calka — publisher
Cynthia Price — editor
Simone Masing — intern
ISSUE CONTRIBUTORS
Mohammed Almustapha
D.A.
Luiza Duarte Caetano
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Elizabeth "Lit" Kurtz
Joshua Lee
James Manning
Ronald Pagereski
Ken Parks
Earl Pullen
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Will Shakespeare
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׉	 7cassandra://s_FH6SJmk4AeExXeQoOELsCChEQMkdWmXv0MTGPZ7AEQf` efK5׉ESEPTEMBER 22, 2023
ON MY CORNER
ASK YOUR VENDOR
If you could travel
anywhere in the world,
where would you go?
Anywhere that has a lot of
people that are passionate
about Jesus, and anywhere
that has had a geninue Christian
revival. But I am happy to
stay right where I am, for now.
— Amanda Gale, #573
Probably Hawaii or somewhere
like that — tropical.
— Glen Page, #407
Yukon, Canada. Go visit my
tribe, hang out with the bears,
run with the wolves, disappear
forever.
— Cindy Gere, #279
Amsterdam. Everything’s legal
there.
— Pony Bush, #305
Nowhere. I stay here.
— Roberto Isla Caballero, #347
I want to hunt down the most
poisonous things in the world:
Australia, China, Africa. But
China first!
— Teresa Basham, #570
If I ever get out of here, I'm
going to Katmandu!
— Ken Parks, #490
Somewhere where a nuclear
bomb won't hit me. I'd like to
work with animals, maybe in
Argentina or somehwere in
South America.
— Terri Demar, #322
My own private island. Or
Malta.
— Joe Woods, #103
First choice is Machu Picchu
but the Amazon scares the hell
out of me. The Black Forest in
Germany is up there, too.
— James Manning, #16
Toss up between Egypt and
Japan.
— Justen White, #543
Greece.
— Derek Allen, #177
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
Would you consider making
nonviolence and kindness "cool?"
JANE REILLY
Groundcover vendor No.611
In 2020, Reverend Al Sharpton
wrote in "Rise Up, Confronting a
Country at the Crossroads," that he
was lectured by both Shirley
Chisholm and Coretta Scott King
for his language. Chisholm was the
first Black woman elected to Congress
and ran for President, and
King was an activist for civil rights,
apartheid abolition, Lesbian, Gay,
Bisexual, Transgender and Queer
rights, and the wife of Reverend Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr.
King said, "Al, don't you realize
words have power? You've got to
learn to filter what you say for the
long-term gain and not sell it for
the short-term satisfaction of being
theatrical or getting attention. Otherwise,
you could win the crowd
but lose the crown."
Sharpton, the founder and President
of the National Action Network
and a civil rights and social justice
activist, defended himself by saying,
"I didn't mean anything by it; it was
just the way we spoke on the streets."
And, "I was just speaking in the
rhythm and style of the times."
Sharpton wrote that his friends
who are rappers and singers say it
is free speech to use the B-word
and N-word in their songs. They
also use the F- and MF-words,
which both have violent sexual
connotations. They use many slurs
against all people.
Sharpton's reply: "Do the record
execs let you use that language on
them? Then, why is it OK for us to
denigrate our own community, our
sisters? We're doing their work for
them."
Why is it OK to denigrate anyone?
Today there is hatred towards
everyone who is different than the
status quo. It is tearing our country
apart.
The use of hate speech is helping
divide our country. Some in the
Black community have told me the
N-word means, "family." I believe
when bigots hear it, it encourages
more hatred.
Hate speech is more than being
vulgar and rude. Hate speech turns
words into weapons to harm others.
In Watts v. United States (1969), the
Supreme Court held that the First
Amendment does not protect profanity
spoken as part of a true
threat, such as profane rants that
cross the line into direct face-toface
personal insults, according to
the Free Speech Center at Middle
Tennessee University. It is also a
misdemeanor in the state of Michigan
under penal code 750.167 section
F for a disorderly person.
When people hear the same negative
words repeated constantly, their
brains believe it is the truth. That's
very dangerous. People with low self
esteem — bullies — need to be
macho and tough. It sometimes
leads to violence. Adults don't need
to be bullies to be "cool." Some rap is
music for and by bullies because the
music industry makes billions of dollars
from hate speech. According to
Sharpton, the rappers say they need
the N-word, B-word and F-MFwords
to show they have "street cred."
We don't have to imitate it.
Marc Morial, President and Chief
Executive Officer of the National
Urban League told CNN.com, "The
N-word has never had a positive
meaning.” The National Urban
League is America's largest historic
civil rights and urban advocacy
organization.
Singer Jose Feliciano played the
National Anthem on acoustic
guitar at the 1968 Major League
Baseball World Series in a Latin
style and Jimi Hendrix played a
spectacular instrumental version
of the Star Spangled Banner on his
electric guitar at Woodstock in
1969. At the time, these were monumental
acts of courage. Feliciano
and Hendrix tried to use their creativity
to bring people together.
We, too, have the power to create
change and bring people together.
Together we can make kindness
and non-violence "cool."
3
From the desk of Panda: Thank you
to our supporters!
Dear public, I feel the need to
finally — from all of us at Groundcover,
from each individual who
has now worked on a daily basis
and even the former vendors —
tell you from our hearts and souls:
One big thank you for all you have
done to support and help the vendors
and paper!
Thank you to our patrons and
regulars who consistently keep us
going. If it was not for you, many of
us would have hung up our hats
long ago. You kept us going
through the COVID-19 pandemic
and even to this very day.
Thank you to all the new buyers.
Meeting new people willing to discover
and read the paper helps us
out more than you know. I always
and booths who represent the
paper. You are all invaluable gems
that keep on shining bright to the
world.
Thanks to the University of MichCINDY
GERE
Groundcover vendor No. 279
find new buyers who want to know
how the papers help us individually
and what Groundcover is
about. New people change the
level of our sales.
Thank you to the volunteers who
take the time out to help at events
igan students who give their study
time to volunteer in the building
daily; you keep us smiling on
gloomy days and keep us happy
going to work.
Thanks to the board for having
the courage to continue and
change lives each and every day.
Because the struggle is real on a
case by case basis. We at Groundcover
have our good days and bad
days just like you. Just know deep
down we thank you for all you
have given each of us.
God bless you!
efK5efK5
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iefK5׉E4
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
COMMUNITY
SEPTEMBER 22, 2023
Happy anniversary to four 'MISSION' community
houses — Jimmy Hill House, Mercy House, Peace
House and Hospitality House
WILL SHAKESPEARE
Groundcover vendor No. 258
This month Washtenaw County
community members can join us to
wish Jimmy Hill House, Mercy House,
Peace House and Hospitality House
happy birthdays. The wise people of
the world say, “Gratitude is a memory
of the heart.” Thousands of people
have received help or life-saving assistance
at the four community houses
under the umbrella known as MISSION
(Michigan Itinerant Shelter
System Interdependent Out of Necessity).
Most human beings tend to
remember the times and places where
they received much needed help to
survive and begin a fresh start. So,
HAPPY BIRTHDAYS! JOYEUX ANNIVERSAIRE
— in French!!
Historical Antecedents
In June 2010 the Michigan Department
of Transportation evicted 78
homeless individuals from the organized
encampment
in Washtenaw
County “Camp Take Notice.” CTN was
informed that their homeless camp
site belonged to MDOT and campers
were forced to leave. After the eviction,
some of the stranded campers received
housing locally, some were accepted
to stay temporarily at the Delonis
Center and many found camping
grounds in several locations in Ann
Arbor and Ypsilanti. Due to the eviction
CTN lost its ability to hold Sunday
dinner meetings sponsored by St.
Mary’s Student Parish of Ann Arbor,
other churches in Scio Township and
Dexter. The leaders of CTN felt that
their social movement had collapsed.
A parishioner of St. Mary’s who
actively supported CTN pre-eviction
came to the rescue.
Peggy Lynch
wholeheartedly opened the doors of
her Burns Park home to CTN members
who wished to maintain the
weekly Sunday dinner meetings.
About six or seven homeless people
were invited to stay in her house. It is
fair to say that Ms. Peggy resurrected
CTN from the dead, and gave it new
life and new hope to carry on.
It was at Peggy’s Burns Park home on
White Street where CTN reconstituted
its board membership and worked
with Peggy and others to create a
homeless community organization
known as MISSION.
Jimmy Hill House
The first task of MISSION was to
raise money in order to buy a three
acre property on Stone School Road so
that CTN residents who had scattered
could have a permanent place for
Sunday dinner meetings, board meetings,
laundry, showers, picking
donated clothing and receiving medical
services. MISSION received a
anonymous donation to purchase the
property and their intention was to
reestablish CTN on their own land. It
is still the intention of the MISSION
board to establish a tiny house community
on this piece of property.
The building was first nicknamed the
“Purple House” due to its brightly
painted exterior. It is now called Jimmy
Hill House in honor of the now-deceased
exemplary leader who helped
guide CTN and served as MISSION
Board President. Jimmy Hill House
was acquired in the fall of 2012.
Many people don't know this, but
Jimmy Hill lived under the U.S. 23
bridge near Carpenter Road for five
years before Caleb Poirier invited him
into Camp Take Notice on Wagner
Road. Jimmy Hill was a natural leader
and instantly became one of the favorites
at Camp Take Notice. Jimmy Hill
led weekly camp meetings, he helped
new residents learn the art of winter
survival and provided residents with
hours of entertainment, regaling them
with stories about his colorful past.
Jimmy Hill continued to show leadership,
when MISSION acquired the
Stone School Road property and even
helped choose the distinctive color
scheme which has become a trademark
of MISSION. Jimmy Hill rose to
be the first homeless president of MISSION
and is still loved by many today.
His slogan was so simple and yet so
powerful, "It is what it is." Many Camp
Take Notice friends had this slogan tattooed
to their forearms after he passed.
Nowadays Jimmy Hill House hosts
the Weather Amnesty Survival Program
which provides emergency shelter
from November to April to
individuals trespassed from other
overnight warming shelters.
Mercy House
Mercy House of Ann Arbor was
opened as a private home of Ms. Peggy
in September 2013. She sold her Burns
Park home and moved to a house in
Ann Arbor’s West Side which is close
Jimmy Hill Memorial House in 2012, before renovation.
to the Robert J. Delonis Center. Peggy
and Sheri Wander, a peace advocate
and resident of CTN, wanted to provide
social services modeled after Dorothy
Day’s Catholic Worker Movement,
along with Jane Addam’s “Hull House”
social work project for addressing the
needs of the poor, the hungry and the
destitute on Chicago’s West Side.
The Mercy House location is still a
private home that works in partnership
with MISSION. This month, it is
celebrating its ten-year anniversary.
Many community members have been
to Mercy House on Saturday for “Peggy’s
pancakes” or their annual Christmas
party.
Peace House
The Peace House of Ypsilanti was
opened by Sheri Wander and her partner
Patrick Jones in September 2018.
This month, we celebrate their fifth
anniversary. Peace House Ypsi is a
house of hospitality in the tradition of
Dorothy Day, Peter Maurin and the
Catholic Worker movement. Their
mission is simply to love. By providing
hospitality, nonviolently resisting
injustice and living in solidarity with
those on the margins, their mission is
to build the world they envision by
living it! Peace House has supported
the creation of grassroots community
projects Pull Over Prevention and Pet
Pals Mutual Aid.
Hospitality House Ypsi
The newest house created under the
umbrella of MISSION is Hospitality
House, located in downtown Ypsilanti.
September marks the first year anniversary
of Hospitality House. The
house is blessed with three capable
and energetic leaders: Lindsay, Ben
and Lauren. The house offers temporary
shelter and has open hours twice
a week for laundry, showers, meals
and social time and is the homebase
for the work of Washtenaw Camp
Outreach.
We are delighted to celebrate the
anniversaries of Jimmy Hill House,
Mercy House, Peace House and Hospitality
House. All four houses exist to
help the homeless and housing-insecure
community members. Wise
people say, “Rome was not built in a
day.” It has taken a lot of “sweat equity,”
“talent equity” and the sacrifices of
church volunteers, student volunteers
and other members of the community
to make lives better and hopeful for
the homeless of Washtenaw County.
Final words from Brian
Durrance, MISSION board
member
The first part of our MISSION acronym
describes our organization's purpose.
The words, "Michigan Itinerant
Shelter System," acknowledge the basic
truth that it takes a village to house the
homeless. Many live in tents, some in
tent cities, many in public housing,
hotels — and many live in houses
which have been opened in love.
Houses like the Jimmy Hill Memorial
are now joined by Mercy House, Peace
House and Hospitaltiy House thanks to
the gracious efforts of activists like
Peggy Lynch and Sheri Wander.
The second part of our MISSION
acronym is our slogan, "Interdependent
out of Necessity." These words
boldly declare that we are a family.
Homeless people needing assistance
with food, shelter, clothing meet in the
middle with those who come to assist.
We are drawn to each other in love,
each fulfilling a powerful personal
need. MISSION began as a small camp
behind the Arborland Mall; now it is a
family which has grown larger and
stronger and has survived over 15
years. And we are powered by pure
love!
׉	 7cassandra://Rjx5Ozj3rC8E6tVPi464ik9ZKUDkNDokjmsZvbqrjS8J` efK5׉E SEPTEMBER 22, 2023
POETRY
This is the real
D.A.
Groundcover contributor
I can not see how so many can limit
themselves.
What I mean is, I am an individual, yet, as
I'm a singular being.
I'm not divided by this life I've lived, nor
by a fragmented society of people we
call our world.
I'd like to say this, so that perhaps,
someone will hear me and understand.
If you've never been broken, you can't be
rebuilt.
Maybe the Mason that laid your foundation,
not the beginning.
I still say it, and I say it again.
I'm an individual who is, has been, broken...
I'm now choosing to stand up again.
I may not have the endings or endings ...
That can all depend.
Let me get back to what I mean, what I'm
attempting to convey, as I stand here giving
you a taste.
When you use the other eye.
Use your own imagination.
Catch a glimpse of another mindset.
It's not just me, we can all feel misled, misunderstood,
even be misguided in the midst of
our very own thinking.
Autumn rain
RONALD PAGERESKI
Groundcover contributor
Rain is falling
sun is nowhere in sight.
Autumn is calling
we'll see, many a chilly night.
On the street the poor will walk,
disdain of them will be the talk.
But many have met bad luck
felt like run over by a truck.
Reach out to them,
some kindness share.
At least show them
that there are those who care.
Rain is falling, taking a toll,
rain is falling in someone's soul.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
5
A day in the
life of Earl
EARL PULLEN
Groundcover contributor
A mastermind
never forsakes
his self for
fortune or fame
but for the dignity
honor and safety
of his people
as a whole
Sinner or
a saint
EARL PULLEN
Some say I’m a
Sinner some say
I’m a saint
I am what I am and I am
What I aint —
My light shines
Better than
A fresh coat of paint
This is the story of a
Sinner or a saint
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iefK5	נefK5 	ׁ̈9ׁHhttps://giga2.orgׁׁЈ׉E6
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
ENVIRONMENT
Discussions are an everyday occurrence
in our lives covering every conceivable
topic and our opinions
therein. Being one of the billions of
inhabitants of this world negatively
affected by the power-hungry corporate
tyrants who have no concern
over consequences, I often find
myself childishly complaining about
such soulless people in conversation
— people who intentionally stand in
the way of a better civilization and
the overall planet. So I find myself
expressing my disgust for those
whose desires can never be satisfied
and how alien such an existence is to
my own.
What really shocks me is the fact
that these few people who hold the
entire world hostage are quite clearly
outnumbered by their victims. Yeah,
we seem unable or unwilling at times
to get up and knock these jerks off
their seats of power. Just to clarify, I
don't speak of people who are simply
affluent. I'm talking about real monsters
who got us dependent on their
energy sources. My belief is these
people are those who can control the
energy market — more specifically
the corporate corruptors who run the
fossil fuels industry. These are the
true power holders of the earth, not
the social elite, not politicians and
not even Elon Musk. I shouldn't need
to point out that when it comes to
all the oil is gone — especially
because the damage it's doing is very
apparent. Worst of all, it may already
be too late for anything we do to even
matter.
But man, it would be an underJAMES
MANNING
Groundcover vendor No. 16
clean alternative environmentally-blessing
energy I think it's highly
unlikely these guys are willing to
embrace it.
Today we have several means of
renewable and clean energy and
anyone with half a brain has asked
the question, "Why the hell aren't we
replacing the destructive burning of
fossil fuels with it?" The first issue is
that it can be very hard to just replace
a current, tried-and-true, effective
system for our energy needs, however
finite it may be.
I do feel that people who run this
industry hold world-ending power
though and I think they might be the
type that if they go down they will
take the whole damn planet with
them. Also that level of power would
probably require a planet-sized intervention
to even challenge it. But we
obviously can't just wait around until
statement to say that a person who
finds their own wealth and self-interest
as more important than the
world's and the human race’s interest
“pisses me off.” I don't care how poor
and unimportant people find me,
being angry is one right I have that
SEPTEMBER 22, 2023
The obvious uphill battle for a future with clean energy
nobody can deprive me of and I know
I'm in the right on this one. It's such
a shame the situation is more complex
than the solution being one big
giant revolt descending on these
people and dragging them down in
the street.
But sadly nothing is ever solved by
such simplistic methods and certainly
not when dealing with the corporate
giants of any kind. And finally
see ENERGY page 8 
24/7
CALL FOR MENTAL HEALTH
OR SUBSTANCE USE SUPPORT
734-544-3050
Brought to you by the 2019 - 2026 Washtenaw County
Public Safety and Mental Health Preservation Millage
washtenaw.org/millage
׉	 7cassandra://4FF92qtVW1Zz5QJffTHYtxuSnknMLV9-fq8hs4Nq-2QV` efK5׉E;SEPTEMBER 22, 2023
COMMUNITY INVESTMENT
As part of the 2021 COVID-19 American
Rescue Plan Act, Ann Arbor
received $24 million. The City was
given until the end of September 2026
to use the funds. An online survey and
live question-and-answer session
were conducted to gather a sense of
how city residents wanted to see the
funds spent.
After hearing from several groups,
the council made its decision this past
April as to who would receive the funding.
Although it is obvious that the
pandemic increased the numbers of
what is already a horrific humanitarian
crisis known as homelessness, the
bulk of the funding went to other
projects.
With the dire impact that was felt by
those who were or became unhoused
during the pandemic, it seems that it
would have been the families on the
streets who would have been most
concerning to the city.
For example, during the pandemic,
the hotline for the shelter system failed
and had to be retooled after getting
backlogged with over 2,000 calls.
Washtenaw District Judge Erane Washington
lamented in a virtual presentation
to the Washtenaw County
Democratic Party that evictions were
“piling up” due to the “astronomical”
increases in rent. The judge noted that
following her vacation she processed
over 30 evictions, leaving families
nowhere to go except the streets.
These families added to the numbers
of people who are “living in circumstances
not fit for human habitation”
as defined by the federal government.
Yet, as it turned out, only around 25%
of the funds were applied to a crisis
that grew within this crisis. Not only
did the numbers of people experiencing
homelessness increase, but the
conditions of those who were already
unhoused became worse.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
ARPA funds pilot guranteed income in Ann Arbor
ELIZABETH "LIT" KURTZ
Groundcover vendor No. 159
Despite disappointing funding for
those who are essentially left in the
elements, a promising initiative for
those who are struggling through
homelessness emerged, a guaranteed
income pilot program. It will help not
only the unhoused, but those who are
living in extreme poverty or poverty.
Although the council approved the
University of Michigan Guaranteed
Income for Ann Arbor or “Gig A2,” it
was not without challenges which
included having the $2,300,000 dollar
allotment reduced to $1,600,000.
Those who can apply for
the
no-strings-attached funding are those
who are, according to MLive, “…
self-employed people, owners of
formal or informal small businesses,
gig workers and people with side hustles
who have low incomes.”
From there, 200 applicants will be
chosen as participants with half receiving
the $528 monthly payments and
the other half serving as a control
group. Every participant will be paid
$50 for completed questionnaires.
Associate Director of the program,
U-M Social Work Professor Kristin
Seefeldt, stated that whether or not an
individual is chosen for the monthly
check, it is important that each group
participate in order to get a true understanding
of the effectiveness of the
study.
7
One of the most passionate proponents
of the program was Councilwoman
Linh Song who is eager to see
the pilot up and running and is hopeful
that when the funding expires, the
city will continue it in the future.
The Michigan Daily reported Song as
saying that she “… hopes it will demonstrate
that folks who struggle, work
very very hard and work multiple jobs,
are the cornerstones
of their
communities.”
Momentum for guaranteed income
may be gaining as Los Angeles, California,
conducted a similar pilot in
2022. The aptly named program,
BREATHE, selected 1,000 participants
to receive $1,000 per month for three
years. It is the sentiment of many programs
leaning towards “unconditional
income” that poverty and extreme
poverty do not allow people to, well,
breathe.
The GigA2 program in Ann Arbor
along with BREATHE in LA may provide
evidence of what many have
known all along. Unconditional giving
may be the best way to give after all.
For those who are interested in the
Guaranteed Income for Ann Arbor
study, the details can be found by visiting
its website: https://giga2.org.
6
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iefK5נefK5 3̞9ׁHhttp://washtenaw.org/FECׁׁЈ׉E!S8
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
AGENCY SPOTLIGHT
Financial empowerment center launches in
Washtenaw County
JOSHUA LEE
Groundcover contributor
In a significant move to enhance the
financial well-being of Washtenaw
County's residents, the Washtenaw
County Office of Community and Economic
Development, in partnership
with the national Cities for Financial
Empowerment Fund, has announced
the grand opening of the Washtenaw
County Financial Empowerment
Center. This initiative offers professional,
one-on-one financial counseling
and coaching as a free public
service to local residents.
The FEC model integrates financial
counseling seamlessly into various
social services, including but not limlimited
to housing and foreclosure
prevention, workforce development,
prisoner reentry, benefits access, and
domestic violence services. This holistic
approach aims to create a comprehensive
and sustainable program that
uplifts the community towards greater
economic stability.
County Commissioner Justin Hodge,
who represents District 5 and is Chair
of the Board of Commissioners,
emphasized the significance of this
initiative, stating, “A Financial Empowerment
Center is a transformative initiative
that will help empower
Washtenaw County residents with the
tools and guidance needed to conquer
their financial challenges and envision
brighter futures for themselves and
their families."
The FECs are staffed with rigorously
trained counselors who provide oneon-one
support to individuals with
low to moderate incomes. Their mission
is to assist clients in managing
finances, reducing debt, increasing
savings, and establishing strong credit.
By investing in financial counseling as
a tool serving a critical public need,
Washtenaw County is taking a proactive
stance in bolstering the success of
various social services, ultimately creating
a more economically stable
community.
To cater to the diverse needs of the
community, the Washtenaw County
FEC offers both in-person and virtual
appointments. Moreover, the Office of
Community and Economic Development
has joined forces with three
community organizations, enabling
clients to access services at four convenient
locations:
• The Washtenaw County Office of
Community and Economic Development,
415 W. Michigan Ave.,
Ypsilanti.
• Faith in Action, 7275 Joy Rd.,
Dexter.
• Jewish Family Services, 2245 S.
State St., Ann Arbor.
• Eastern Michigan University, University
Advising and Career Development
Center, 878 Cross St., Ypsilanti,
200 McKenny Hall.
Clients interested in making an
appointment can do so via the Washtenaw
County FEC website,
washtenaw.org/FEC
The Financial Empowerment Center
is expected to become a cornerstone
of accessible financial services in the
Washtenaw community. It will not
only complement existing programs
offered by community partners but
also enhance them. Faith in Action,
one of the co-locations, shared their
perspective on this development in a
press release, emphasizing the significance
of financial education in supporting
households that struggle with
money. “Being able to connect clients
with individualized financial counseling
and education is a great tool and is
a part of creating more success financially
for these households.”
Partnering with community organizations
is a key aspect of the FEC
model. This collaboration streamlines
access to financial services for vulnerable
populations who are already utilizing
services from partner
organizations. It effectively creates a
"one-stop-shop" for community members,
removing barriers to access.
The Financial Empowerment Center
initiative extends its reach to the Eastern
Michigan University community.
Jessica “Decky” Alexander, Director of
co-location Engage@EMU, highlighted
the importance of this service
for students. “We know that finances
is one of the most consistent barriers
to accessing and persisting through
college, our hope is that the FEC will
be a space and place to remove such
barriers for years to come.”
Similarly, Elina Zilberberg, Chief
Operating Officer of co-location
Jewish Family Services, emphasized
the value of having this resource in
their building. FEC counselors will be
readily accessible to anyone needing
help with personal finances, budgeting,
and creating a solid financial plan.
This service is expected to benefit both
clients and members of the community
as they seek wrap-around services
from JFSWC.
The FEC model has a proven track
record of success across the United
States. First piloted in New York City
under Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg in
2008, FECs have collectively worked
with almost 150,000 clients. These centers
have helped individuals reduce
individual debt by over $225 million
and increase their families' savings by
close to $45 million.
An evaluation conducted by the
Cities for Financial Empowerment
Fund demonstrated the effectiveness
of the program, even for residents with
very low incomes and other complex
financial challenges. Washtenaw
County joins several dozen local governments
across the nation in launching
or planning to launch their local
FEC initiatives. The Washtenaw
County FEC is made possible through
support from the CFE Fund and American
Rescue Plan Funds.
SEPTEMBER 22, 2023
 ENERGY from page 6
there's the fact that these are the largest
players of financial might the
world has ever seen. I sometimes like
to believe that people with such
unimaginable power and resources
will possess more lofty ideas for
future industries that would ensure
continued prosperity for the collective
human race.
Yet while some do make good use
of their position, a great many more
just hoard useless crap to show off
with, then assign it to obscure storage-bound
junk. And this is some
valuable stuff — art that's not looked
at or appreciated, cars not driven,
homes not lived in and so forth.
So I sometimes wonder to myself if
these people ever give a thought to or
experience any concern for their
future. I mean there are possible
catastrophes of a large enough scale
to render everything they have
worthless. Just because nothing has
happened yet doesn't make the possibility
of such an event non-existent.
But if I were to bet on anything that
would guarantee unity amongst
humankind … it would be an epic
global tragedy.
I'm never entirely sure if I'm truly
happy to be alive and experience this
particular stretch of time in humanity’s
progress. Obviously I live pretty
comfortably compared to countless
lives spent during more chaotic and
unforgiving times. But with myself
being a fan of science fiction, I would
have loved to know the capabilities
we would be permitted to achieve if
we continue advancing throughout
the coming years. And I mean
achievements of mankind alone —
without any interventions be them
alien or divine.
I have to say though, however
undecided I feel about that, I do feel
pretty damn privileged. I feel this way
because I'm a sci-fi geek at heart and
I get to witness some pretty important
milestones in the environment in
the advancement of technology. This
is all just one small part as well as a
subject I have some interest in. I utilize
this to maintain positivity in my
life.
I believe a crucial part of life for any
sentient being capable of emotion is
being able to live with oneself. It certainly
helps knowing right from
wrong and possessing a reasonable
and healthy viewpoint — something
entirely your own and not what the
external World deems necessary.
That is why I choose to share these
environmental concerns that I'm
thankfully not alone in: to highlight
perhaps the world's greatest environmental
offenders and the gross negligence
they demonstrate for the sake
of corporate gain. The fact is, we
indeed do possess less destructive
alternatives yet have an inability to
challenge and ultimately supplant
such tyrants. And now it seems too
great a coincidence that such a threat
thrives in the absence of global and
social unity. That pitting the common
people against each other to ensure
we remain divided and consequently
powerless is such an effective yet
obvious strategy.
I feel it important to generate
awareness of such a grim topic for
several reasons, but I think my favorite
would be the David versus Goliath
irony. If I, myself being such an
impoverished and unimportant element,
actually kick-started a movement
that would culminate in global
superpowers’ ruin ... I would continue
to hope such dreams will someday
manifest in reality. Regardless of
whatever scornful prejudices are
aimed at me, I can at least sleep at
night.
׉	 7cassandra://ZtNAEPPubpxeDbW60R31bSPrqHUelBBRz1fejb5IHygM{` efK5׉E"SEPTEMBER 22, 2023
HARMONY
The bees are back
A beautiful thing that I have been
seeing lately is the abundance of buzzing
activity in the flower beds during
my walks. Sadly, summer is winding
down, and I have been trying to enjoy
it by maximizing my walks. As I battled
with a lot of things in the past few
years, for some reason I always managed
to keep track of bee news,
whether it be bee Colony Collapse Disease,
large sectors of agriculture shutting
down due to the loss of the prime
pollinator, bee colonies being devastated
by pesticides (thank you Monsanto)
or suffering from mite attacks,
loss of habitat and global warming.
While walking through Gallup Park
the other day, as I was prepping my
medication, a 420-friendly bee came
and landed right on my medical flower.
He seemed cool; I tried to explain to
him/her that this flower was already
cured and didn't need pollination. He
just smiled and calmly flew away — he
might have caught a contact high, at
least I hope so. I hope he got some
respite from his pollinator activities.
Then there was another bee that tried
global bee population? Is the Colony
Collapse Disorder still spreading
havoc? Are the bees still suffering from
loss of habitat and pesticides and mite
attacks?
To my awesome happy surprise, I got
MOHAMMED ALMUSTAPHA
Groundcover contributor
to attack me while I was inhaling my
medication and I ended up having to
fumigate him with my own lungs.
I am extremely ecstatic that the bee
population in Michigan is becoming
noticeably more noticeable. I hope that
the population throughout the world
rebounds so that agriculture can flourish.
The more organic we are, the better
we will be. Our state depends heavily
on agriculture. As an avid lover of Michigan
cherries, boy I am happy the bees
are back.
The increased buzzful activity led me
to googling: What is the status of the
to read that the efforts of beekeepers
seeking to mitigate the loss and the
decline of the bee population in the
United States have been successful.
These beautiful people have been putting
intense effort into making sure
that the bee colonies of this country
stay thriving. Their efforts have paid
great dividends. So, to all of you out
there throughout the lands of this beautiful
nation, thank you for making sure
that our bees are surviving, thriving,
and happily twerking away the day on
our pretty native Michigan flowers.
I hope we all get to see them every
summer on and on. It really is a beautiful
sight; if you ever walk by a flower
bed or a bush and you hear buzzing
activities, just stop and look — look at
them work, not worrying about nothing,
not worrying about all the urban warfare
that is being perpetrated on them.
No pesticides, no mites, no colony
collapse disease, no fumigations have
been able to put them down because
they know what they must do when
they are doing it and God bless them for
it. I love your sweet honey; I love what
you do for the flowers; and I love that
you get to fly being productive all day.
And I am happy to say that I have never
been stung by a bee, which means me
and the bees be homies. (But if I do get
stung, I will not hold it against you
bees.) I am simply happy that your population
is thriving here, and I hope that
it thrives globally. Amen.
May you all go on to pollinate all
throughout the world blessing us with
non-GMO, non-pesticide, non-monetized,
beautiful, organic, whole fruits
and vegetables. And of course, most
importantly, honey, which goes good
as a snack with cream cheese spread
over any flat bread of any kind. Amen.
“Striving to be a better man today than
I was yesterday, and a better man tomorrow
than I am today.”
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
9
My 80th
year
times a day for 10 days. I chose the
My 80th birthday, celebrated last
October, was a benchmark event in my
life. Friends Meeting House was the
perfect location and my friends Luiza
and Elliott did the preparation that
made it natural and simple. It did not
follow the proposed plan of open mic
and dancing because the many smaller
conversations were so much more
vibrant and better than the original plan.
I think everyone met someone new and
experienced themselves as born again
in a positive social context. The food was
wonderful and plentiful, as is common
with community based potlucks.
Quakers, Mennonites and Brethren
are the three historic peace churches
and each has a place in my life. They
prepared me to have a relationship
with the civil and social rights movements
of the 1960s. Meeting Thich Nhat
Hanh, the Vietnamese Buddhist monk
who Martin Luther King nominated for
a Nobel Peace Prize, inspired me to be
a draft resister on April 3,1968. King was
assassinated the next day.
His speeches are sacred relics of
American history. Beyond Vietnam is
required listening for those who want
to know the essence of that time in history.
What we face today is not a repeat
of the past but it rhymes with all songs
of freedom. The intensity of wealth
KEN PARKS
Groundcover vendor No. 490
extraction from the global working
class, including the corruption of
public funds and the revolving door of
the corporate state,
is driving the
people of poor third world countries to
the first world, the core capitalist countries.
Simultaneously, first world countries
are turning into third world
societies as supremacist elites invest in
robots and artificial intelligence in
order to maximize profits. Human
beings become commodities in financial
speculation. Pension funds become
investors' toys. It can easily feel like one
struggle, too many fronts, as we experience
the results of our individual and
collective actions.
My 80th year is full of health challenges
that shook me to the core, especially
the acute chronic bladder
retention that required an ER trip and
a catheter for 10 days. I had to postpone
a trip to Cuba. When the retention persisted.
I was given the choice to do 10
more days or self catheterize three
“hands on” option and was in the clear
after several successful self-catheterizations.
I was able to go to Cuba and
deepen the core family of Daniela, the
mother I have known since her birth,
and Santiago Alberto, our shared son,
who will be four years old on November
9 this year. Mother and son are
both my “ahijados,” so I am a mentor,
protector and spiritual friend. This is
common in Cuban culture and promotes
a deep and stable family.
Daniela began meditating with me
in 2006 when I was doing an Amitabha
Buddhist retreat in Cuba. My niece
Jayme, 23-years-old then, got a virus in
her brain stem and went into a coma. I
put her in the center of my meditation
and Daniela sat with me and we went
into profound meditative states, “at one
with reality!” What a blessing. Our bond
deepened when she announced that
she wanted to live with me until I die.
As I look at my 81st birthday, that offer
is taking on new life as we live in the
dialectic of change and what it means
to “serve the people,” an important
value that was widespread in the 60s
and 70s and is reappearing today as we
work in this world.
I talked in 2017 about doing volunteer
work at Karma Triyana Dharmachakra,
the monastery in Woodstock, New York.
Complex challenges, including the
COVID-19 pandemic, changed everything.
Daniela did express the intention
to live with and care for me until I die,
once telling me that when I die I will be
reborn to her.
We plan to live together and I have an
account with U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Services to promote her
immigration to Ann Arbor. I do not
have the income to qualify as a sponsor
but do have support from a backup
sponsor which should pass bureaucratic
review.
Emigration from Cuba is challenging
because of visa policies and high ticket
prices due to corporate gouging. If the
United States would end the blockade,
which is an act of war, travel would be
easier and emigration less likely. The
American people are pretty oblivious to
the results of U.S. foreign policy. Haiti
is the showcase example of what can
happen if you resist colonial or imperialist
rule. The election of Aristede in
Haiti was not accepted by the “rulesbased
order” of investor elites. You may
recall that coup d’etat.
I hope you read “The People Are The
Power” in the August edition of
Groundcover News. I believe that perspective
will help us “serve the people”
in the difficult times before us. I also
hope that we look back on the International
Day of Peace as we move into the
era when we “Compost War and Grow
Peace.” “The harvest is great and the
laborers are few” as Jesus put it. Let’s
take the breath that empowers us to
connect and do something good. Let’s
plan to celebrate my 81st birthday and
the Day of Che on October 8th.
efK5efK5
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
TRUTH OR LIES
Truth or lies: The Quest
Throughout the history of humankind
people have searched from mountain
plateau to every forest floor looking
for the fountain of youth. In 1722 King
George I of Great Britain had a secret
exploration commission. He hired his
dear friend, Thomas Chatham, and
wife, Sabrina. He gave Thomas the best
ship he owned, along with a crew of 30
men and seven women. Thomas's job
was to explore the world north, south,
east and west for 10 years in search of
the fountain of youth.
King George I never understood how
far they could travel, or if they could
even go across the world. However, he
tried to prepare them as best as he
could. He gave them instruments and
mapping charts, navigational tools
and all the food supplies the ship
could carry. He even supplied them
with gold, rubies and diamonds for
trade, and weapons to protect themselves.
He sent his best archers and
fighters as part of the crew, to protect
the ship and his cargo. In hopes of not
attracting pirates, he named the ship
the Explorer.
King George I trusted in Thomas,
Thomas's adventure went well, until
they were stranded on an uncharted
island for six months. After repairing
the ship, they left the island heading
southwest.
Time passed swiftly. After five years
FELICIA WILBERT
Groundcover vendor No. 234
who was really his third cousin by marriage.
They grew up together; Thomas'
mother was George's father’s servant.
King George I knew he was ill. However,
he never let anyone know how
sick he really was. His confidence was
in Thomas, and finding the fountain of
youth, in order to heal himself. He had
heard rumors of how the fountain
would heal his body and restore his
youth.
Thomas and his crew left Great Britain
in 1722 heading east. He documented
and charted
every island,
mountain and body of water they traveled
through. The first two years of
he traveled to over 100 islands, still not
finding the fountain of youth. After the
seventh year, he finally landed in
Canada. He was surprised to find out
that King George had died two years
earlier.
One night while in Canada, his wife
was sitting by the fire and had a vision.
She saw the fountain of youth. It was a
pool with words pouring out of it. The
words were from God, explaining how
to conduct your life in order to have
eternal life. She rushed to her husband's
side and requested his attention.
Sitting down in their quarters she
explained to him about her vision. She
told him how she had seen the fountain
of youth and how it was spewing
out words. Her interpretation was that
it is God’s plan for us to have eternal
life with Him, and while we are here
He preserves us.
Thomas’s wife said, “Enough is
enough, I’m tired of traveling, and you
need to understand the word of God.
The only fountain of youth is his preservation
for us. Let’s not chase at the
rumors and instead hold on to God’s
word.”
After contemplating his wife’s words,
Thomas sold his ship and purchased
land. They built
a house for every
family who was willing to stay. They
settled in Canada and raised their
family of three children until God
came for them.
Thank you Truth Or Lies readers, but you
voted wrong! "Randy the Racer," published
June 16, was LIES. Vote on whether or not
"The Quest" is Truth or Lies at
groundcovernews.org
SEPTEMBER 22, 2023
-
׉	 7cassandra://KQn7vZ9jw1_ZrLLfhpAdTVO4WdEyIQztN80qibPogX8Of` efK5׉E
	SEPTEMBER 22, 2023
PUZZLES
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
11
Groundcover Vendor Code
While Groundcover is a non-profit,
and paper vendors are self-employed
contractors, we still have
expectations of how vendors should
conduct themselves while selling
and representing the paper.
The following is our Vendor Code
of Conduct, which every vendor
reads and signs before receiving a
badge and papers. We request that
if you discover a vendor violating
any tenets of the Code, please contact
us and provide as many details
as possible. Our paper and our vendors
should be positively impacting
our County.
• Groundcover will be a voluntary
purchase. I agree not to ask for
more than the cover price or solicit
donations by any other means.
• When selling Groundcover, I
will always have the current
biweekly issue of Groundcover
available for customer purchase.
• I agree not to sell additional
goods or products when selling the
paper or to panhandle, including
panhandling with only one paper or
selling past monthly issues.
• I will wear and display my badge
when selling papers and refrain from
wearing it or other Groundcover gear
when engaged in other activities.
• I will only purchase the paper
from Groundcover Staff and will not
sell to or buy papers from other
Groundcover vendors, especially
vendors who have been suspended
or terminated.
• I agree to treat all customers,
staff, and other vendors respectfully.
I will not “hard sell,” threaten,
harass or pressure customers,
staff, or other vendors verbally or
physically.
• I will not sell Groundcover
under the influence of drugs or
alcohol.
• I understand that I am not a legal
employee of Groundcover but a contracted
worker responsible for my
own well-being and income.
• I understand that my badge is
property of Groundcover and will
not deface it. I will present my
badge when purchasing the papers.
• I agree to stay off private property
when selling Groundcover.
• I understand to refrain from
selling on public buses, federal
property or stores unless there is
permission from the owner.
• I agree to stay at least one block
away from another vendor in downtown
areas. I will also abide by the
Vendor Corner Policy.
• I understand that Groundcover
strives to be a paper that covers
topics of homelessness and poverty
while providing sources of
income for the homeless. I will try
to help in this effort and spread the
word.
If you would like to report a violation
of the Vendor Code please
email contact@groundcovernews.
com or fill out the contact form on
our website.
PUZZLE SOLUTIONS
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
FOOD
No-knead soda bread
LUIZA DUARTE CAETANO
Groundcover contributor
Ingredients:
2 cups all-purpose flour and some
more for dusting
½ tsp baking soda
½ tsp salt
¾ cup buttermilk or yogurt
Directions:
Preheat the oven to 400F. Line a
baking sheet with parchment paper.
Mix all the ingredients in a bowl
using a wooden spoon or spatula.
Dust a flat surface with some flour
and roll the dough onto it, shaping it
into a ball.
Place the bread on the baking sheet
and make two cuts across it with a
sharp knife.
Bake for about 30 min or until the
bread sounds hollow when you tap the
bottom. Eat on the same day or freeze,
sliced or whole.
SEPTEMBER 22, 2023
LUNCH OR DINNER WE’VE GOT YOU!
Whether it’s
$2 OFF
NATURAL FOODS MARKET & DELI
216 N. FOURTH AVENUE ANN ARBOR, MI
PHONE (734) 994 - 9174 • PEOPLESFOOD.COOP
ANY PURCHASE OF
$15 OR MORE
One coupon per transaction. Must present coupon at the time of
purchase. Coupon good for in-store only. No other discounts or coop
cards apply. Not valid for gift cards, case purchases, beer or wine.
OFFER
EXPIRES
10/8/2023
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